[PS3-7-2-1] Single Look Complex (SLC)

SLC is an abbreviation and stands for Single Look Complex. SLC data are one so called radar product. Like all radar products they have been derived from SAR raw data, often called Level 0 products, downloaded from the SAR satellite by the satellite operators. They apply a software called a processor to transform SAR raw data into formats that can be used by users for different applications. SLC data are often referred to as Level 1 products and are the first SAR product derived from the raw data to be made available to users. As the name suggests, SLC data only contain one single look, which means that the azimuth compression has been carried out using the full azimuth bandwidth of the SAR sensor leading to the highest spatial resolution in azimuth direction. But as a consequence, SLC data suffers from maximum speckle. The word “complex” in SLC means that the data are stored as complex numbers with a real and an imaginary part. In this way, SLC data contain both – phase stored in the real part and amplitude information stored in the imaginary part of the complex number for one resolution cell. SLC data are given in slant-range geometry and appears to be distorted. The is due to the fact that the spacing between pixels in the slant range direction is directly proportional to the signal travel time or time interval between backscattered and received radar pulses. And this time interval in again is directly proportional to the slant range distance between the sensor and the imaged objects at the Earth’s surface and not to the horizontal ground distance between the nadir and the imaged object. Therefore, SLC images appear distorted, which means that they look compressed in near range (close to the nadir) and getting ever more expanded in towards the far range. SLC data are the basis for further SAR products generated and are required for interferometric analysis methods, which rely on phase and amplitude information.

External resources

  • Raney, R.K. (1998). Radar fundamentals: technical perstective. In F.M. Henderson, & A.J. Lewis (Eds.), Principals and Applications of Imaging Radar, Manual of Remote Sensing (pp. 9-130): Wiley
    Raney, R.K. (1998). Radar fundamentals: technical perstective. In F.M. Henderson, & A.J. Lewis (Eds.), Principals and Applications of Imaging Radar, Manual of Remote Sensing (pp. 9-130): Wiley
  • Woodhouse, I. H. (2006). Introduction to microwave remote sensing. Taylor & Francis Group

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